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    1. Getting hit with a BRIC - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      As I read this article, I kept thinking about the concern expressed by politicians and the media about the high level of U.S. debt held by China (...)

    2. More big words in international copyright - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Cross-retaliation is another example of unintended consequences for the United States, and another indication that developing countries, (...)

    3. 2010 February

      This theory is the basis of a risk management and pricing system that underlies our global economy. But is this theory correct? Time (...)

    4. It seems simple, really - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      So creative industries seeking to grow in the digital economy need to do more than try, futilely, to eradicate piracy, they need to (...)

    5. East Asian Libraries - Japanese Studies - LibGuides at Duke University

      Washington Art, political economy, literature@atomic bomb, women, left-wing, Butow papers, separate law library.

    6. Periodicals - Japanese Studies - LibGuides at Duke University

      Japan in the World Independent critical views on Japanese, regional, and global politics, economy, society, and culture, voiced from a (...)

    7. Saying the right things, then doing them - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      To this reaction she replies,  Closing our work away from non-scholarly readers, and keeping our conversations private, might protect us from (...)

    8. Ladino - Jewish Studies - LibGuides at Duke University

      The book offers close readings of works that examine issues such as social inequality, exile and diaspora, gender, secularization, and the clash (...)

    9. Moving beyond the photo album - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Nevertheless, the promotion and tenure system still relies, for the time being, on these journals, which presumably cannot survive if libraries (...)

    10. Getting Started - Patents - LibGuides at Duke University

      Orcutt; Paul C. Remus In today's economy, patents tend to be the most important of the intellectual property (IP) assets.

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